193,753 research outputs found
"Infrastructure Investment for Tomorrow, A Financing Plan to Eliminate the Deferred Maintenance on the Nation's Roads"
Regan presents a long-term public investment proposal to preserve and upgrade the nation's infrastructure system. He offers a unique financing plan to eliminate much of the backlog of deferred maintenance that plagues America's roads and bridges. The plan would allow states and municipalities to get out from under this burden with a one-time upgrading program and then attain a new capacity to maintain and improve their infrastructure networks. Regan concludes that the goal of long-term investing is "to make possible sustained growth, improved productivity, and a strengthened private sector" for the next generation. A program to upgrade the nation's infrastructure base could help the United States achieve this goal.
Pliotrema Regan 1906
Genus Pliotrema Regan, 1906a Sixgill Sawsharks Pliotrema Regan, 1906a: 1. Type species: Pliotrema warreni Regan, 1906, by original description.Published as part of Ebert, David A., Wintner, Sabine P. & Kyne, Peter M., 2021, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of South Africa, pp. 1-127 in Zootaxa 4947 (1) on page 37, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4947.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/461456
Priapella Regan 1913
Priapella Regan Priapella Regan, 1913: 992. Type species: Gambusia bonita Meek, 1904. Type by monotypy. Gender: feminine. Composition. Priapella bonita (Meek), P. compressa Alvarez, P. intermedia Alvarez & Carranza, P. olmecae Meyer & Perez. Distribution. Southern Mexico.Published as part of Lucinda, Paulo Henrique Franco & Reis, Roberto E., 2005, Systematics of the subfamily Poeciliinae Bonaparte (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae), with an emphasis on the tribe Cnesterodontini Hubbs, pp. 1-60 in Neotropical Ichthyology 3 (1) on page 39, DOI: 10.1590/S1679-62252005000100001, http://zenodo.org/record/541736
Gymnothorax monostigma Regan 1909
<i>Gymnothorax monostigma</i> (Regan, 1909) <p>R*AΟR</p> <p> <i>Muraena monostigma</i> Regan, 1909:438 (type locality: Raiatea, Society Islands).</p> <p> <i>Gymnothorax monostigma</i> (Regan, 1909): Chen & Yu, 1986:249; Shao <i>et al</i>., 2008:238; Loh <i>et al</i>., in press:table 1. <i>Gymnothorax monostigmus</i> (Regan, 1909): Shen <i>et al</i>., 1993:105.</p> <p>Remarks. A rare species collected by hook and line off southeastern Taiwan.</p>Published as part of <i>Ho, Hsuan-Ching, Smith, David G., Mccosker, John E., Hibino, Yusuke, Loh, Kar-Hoe, Tighe, Kenneth A. & Shao, Kwang-Tsao, 2015, Annotated checklist of eels (orders Anguilliformes and Saccopharyngiformes) from Taiwan, pp. 140-189 in Zootaxa 4060 (1)</i> on page 158, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4060.1.16, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/243651">http://zenodo.org/record/243651</a>
Heteronarce garmani : Regan 1921
Heteronarce garmani Regan, 1921 Natal Electric Ray Heteronarce garmani Regan, 1921: 414. Holotype (unique): BMNH 1921.3.1.3. Type locality: 15–20 miles off Umvoti River, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Local synonymy: Heteronarce garmani: Regan, 1921: 414; Gilchrist, 1922b: 50; von Bonde & Swart, 1923: 14; Barnard, 1925: 92; Fowler, 1925b: 193; Barnard, 1927: 1016; Smith, 1949a: 74, fig. 90; Smith, 1964: 291, pl. 29a; Smith, 1965: 74, fig. 90; Wallace, 1967a: 55, fig. 28; Compagno, 1986: 113, fig. 24.1; Compagno et al., 1989: 82, pl.; Compagno, 1999: 116; Compagno & Heemstra, 2007: 43; NPOA, 2013: 52; da Silva et al., 2015: 247; Ebert & van Hees, 2015: 146; de Carvalho, 2016: 175, fig. 16.3; Weigmann, 2016: 912. Heteronarce regani von Bonde & Swart, 1923: 14, fig. 2, pl. 22 (original descrption). Narcine natalensis Fowler, 1925a: 198, fig. 2 (original description). Narcine garmani Fowler, 1925b: 193. South Africa voucher material: Holotype: BMNH 1921.3.1.3. Non-types: SAIAB 16568, SAIAB 10439 [former ORI B 834]. South African distribution: Algoa Bay (EC) to northern KZN. Remarks: A very rare, small, regionally endemic electric ray known only from the east coast of South Africa, Mozambique and Madagascar. Conservation status: NT (2020). Genus Narke Kaup, 1826 Onefin Sleeper Rays Narke Kaup, 1826: 88. Type species: Raja capensis Gmelin, 1789, by monotypy.Published as part of Ebert, David A., Wintner, Sabine P. & Kyne, Peter M., 2021, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of South Africa, pp. 1-127 in Zootaxa 4947 (1) on pages 70-71, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4947.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/461456
Rhamphichthyidae Regan 1911
<p>Family Rhamphichthyidae Regan 1911</p> <p> Rhamphichthyidae Regan 1911e:25 [ref. 3642] (family) <i>Rhamphichthys</i></p>Published as part of <i>Laan, Richard Van Der, Eschmeyer, William N. & Fricke, Ronald, 2014, Family-group names of Recent fishes, pp. 1-230 in Zootaxa 3882 (2)</i> on page 57, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3882.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7047777">http://zenodo.org/record/7047777</a>
Pliotrema warreni : Regan 1906
Pliotrema warreni Regan, 1906a Sixgill Sawshark Pliotrema warreni Regan, 1906a: 1, pl. 1. Syntypes: BMNH 1899.2.10.4 (skeleton in spirit), ~ 704 mm TL; BMNH 1905.6.8.9 (1). Type locality: False Bay, Cape of Good Hope, Western Cape Province, South Africa and off the coast of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Local synonymy: Pliotrema warreni: Regan, 1906a: 1, pl. 1; Thompson, 1914: 152; Gilchrist, 1922b: 50; Barnard, 1925: 53, fig. 3, pl. 3; Barnard, 1947: 20, fig. 6, pl. 3; Smith, 1949a: 62, pl. 3; Smith, 1965: 62, pl. 3; Bass et al., 1975d: 20, fig. 11, pl. 8; Compagno, 1984a: 132, fig.; Bass & Heemstra, 1986: 106, fig. 20.1; Compagno et al., 1989: 36, pl.; Compagno et al., 1991: 73; Compagno, 1999: 115; Ebert & Cailliet, 2011: 501; Ebert & Wilms, 2013: 86; Ebert, 2013: 153, fig. 162; Ebert et al., 2013 a: 179, fig., pl. 18; Ebert & Mostada, 2013: 12, fig.; NPOA, 2013: 51; da Silva et al., 2015: 247; Ebert, 2015: 116, fig. 130; Ebert & Mostada, 2015: 10, fig.; Ebert & van Hees, 2015: 145; Weigmann, 2016: 907; Weigmann et al., 2020: 1, figs. 26–27.? Pristiophorus cirratus (non Latham): Thompson, 1914: 153. A single record of this species is based on a specimen from False Bay (WC) that was a misidentification by G.A. Boulenger, but later used by Regan as one of the two syntypes for P. warreni (see Barnard, 1925: 53; Smith, 1949a: 61; Smith, 1965: 61). South Africa voucher material: Syntypes: BMNH 1899.2.10.4, BMNH 1905.6.8.9. Non-types: SAIAB 4125, SAIAB 6225, SAIAB 8056, SAIAB 12978, SAIAB 14602, SAIAB 18301, SAIAB 26447, SAIAB 26448, SAIAB 26449, SAIAB 27434, SAIAB 69152, SAIAB 88248, SAIAB 99181, SAIAB 99182, SAIAB 99183, SAIAB 186452, SAIAB 189132, SAIAB 208021. South Africa distribution: Table Bay (WC) to the KZN border with Mozambique. Remarks: The genus Pliotrema has been considered to be monotypic, but a recent revision has revealed two new species in the genus (Weigmann et al., 2020); both new species do not occur off South Africa. The global distribution of P. warreni is now considered to range from central Namibia to southern Mozambique, with most of the population occurring on the Agulhas Bank (EC), South Africa. Conservation status: LC (2020). Order OrectolobiformesPublished as part of Ebert, David A., Wintner, Sabine P. & Kyne, Peter M., 2021, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of South Africa, pp. 1-127 in Zootaxa 4947 (1) on page 37, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4947.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/461456
Synchiropus sechellensis Regan 1908
<i>Synchiropus sechellensis</i> Regan, 1908 <p>Seychelles dragonet</p> <p> <i>Synchiropus sechellensis</i> Regan, 1908: 249, pl. 30, fig. 1 (Seychelles; syntypes: BMNH 1908.3.23.265–266, 2 specimens).</p> <p> <i>Synchiropus altivelis</i> Regan, 1908: 249, Pl. 30 (fig. 2) (Seychelles; holotype: BMNH 1908.3.23.264; secondarily preoccupied by <i>Callionymus altivelis</i> Temminck and Schlegel, 1845 when in genus <i>Synchiropus</i>, replaced by <i>Synchiropus normani</i> Schultz and Woods, 1948).</p> <p> <i>Synchiropus normani</i> Schultz and Woods, 1948: 419 (Seychelles; replacement name for <i>Synchiropus altivelis</i> Regan, 1908, secondarily preoccupied in <i>Synchiropus</i> by <i>Callionymus altivelis</i> Temminck and Schlegel, 1845).</p> <p> <i>Distribution and habitat.</i> Red Sea (Gulf of Suez); Gulf of Aden; Somalia; Seychelles; Maldives; East Coral Sea (Chesterfield Islands; Banc du Sable); New Caledonia (Grande Terre Group); Mediterranean Sea (Turkey, as Lessepsian migrant). Sand and rubble, 37– 68 m.</p>Published as part of <i>Fricke, Ronald, 2016, Synchiropus novaehiberniensis, a new species of dragonet from New Ireland, Papua New Guinea, western Pacific Ocean, with a review of subgenus Synchiropus (Neosynchiropus) and description of a new subgenus (Teleostei: Callionymidae), pp. 3003-3028 in Journal of Natural History 50</i> on page 3013, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2016.1210690, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5189861">http://zenodo.org/record/5189861</a>
Heterenchelyidae Regan 1912
<p>Family Heterenchelyidae Regan 1912</p> <p> Heterenchelidae Regan 1912d:379, 382 [ref. 31893] (family) <i>Heterenchelys</i> [stem corrected to Heterenchely- by Jordan 1923a:133 [ref. 2421], confirmed by Myers and Storey 1956:17 [ref. 32831], by Nelson 1976:83 [ref. 32838], by McCosker 1977:16 [ref. 6836], by Smith 1989:48 [ref. 13285] and by Nelson 2006:116 [ref. 32486]]</p>Published as part of <i>Laan, Richard Van Der, Eschmeyer, William N. & Fricke, Ronald, 2014, Family-group names of Recent fishes, pp. 1-230 in Zootaxa 3882 (2)</i> on page 30, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3882.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7047777">http://zenodo.org/record/7047777</a>
- …
